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Since The Crimson’s editorial board was founded in 1911, the paper’s content has been divided into two worlds: news and editorial. We take great pains to make sure that our editorial content and our news coverage are completely independent of each other; we call this separation the “news-editorial wall...

Author: By The crimson editoral board | Title: The Harvard Crimson’s Editorial Page: How We Work | 10/6/2006 | See Source »

...image of a person grieving expresses a certain rawness, a singular emotional intensity that, strangely, rarely surfaces in images of the 9/11 aftermath. Artists dealing with acts of terror are often content to represent a more general sense of national grief through abstract images, like the photographs of twisted debris that comprise Joel Meyerowitz’s photo-book “Aftermath.” Often, this results in gripping, affective art.But when someone explicitly grieves for a friend who died in the attacks, the moment is special, charged with the weighty energy that comes only with proximity...

Author: By Kyle L. K. Mcauley, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: 9/11 Art Shoots For the Heart | 10/5/2006 | See Source »

...Mylo isn't just a practical device, it's fun - in addition to its many communications features, it can play songs and video clips, and show photo slideshows. (You have to load content onto Memory Sticks with special software.) Its screen is bright and has great resolution, and there?s even a notepad program for free typing. Its feel, clearly derived from the PSP, is natural, though like a game controller it takes some getting used to at first. My biggest complaint is it?s got Google Talk and Yahoo! Messenger, but it?s missing the big one: AOL Instant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gadget Showdown: Skype Wi-Fi Phones | 10/4/2006 | See Source »

...things than the [official] alumni magazine,” said Assistant Editor Gregory R. Atwan ’05. “We don’t do sepia-tinted looks back on the class of 1940. There may be an overlap in our audience, but not in our content.” According to Daniel M. Loss ’00, the co-founder of 02138, this focus on profiling alums with fresh and contemporary achievements made compiling “The Harvard 100” difficult. “It was impossible to be completely objective...we recognized...

Author: By Asli A. Bashir, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: 02138: Sheer Vanitas | 10/4/2006 | See Source »

...Hindi-language film industry. Harvard Business School Publishing (HBSP), the review’s not-for-profit parent company, announced last week that it would team with the India Today Group, a media conglomerate, on the South Asian venture. The South Asian monthly will contain close to the same content as the U.S. edition but will run regional advertising, according to HBR spokeswoman Cathy Olofson. The debut of HBR South Asia is slated for Oct. 16, with a kick-off event in Mumbai featuring several CEOs of top Indian companies. The South Asia edition joins HBR versions printed in China...

Author: By Kelly Y. Gu, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard Business Review Launches New Indian Edition | 10/4/2006 | See Source »

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